Understanding user criteria for event types in Workforce Optimization for ITSM

  • Release version: Washingtondc
  • Updated February 1, 2024
  • 2 minutes to read
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    Summary of Understanding User Criteria for Event Types in Workforce Optimization for ITSM

    This section details how to manage user access for various event types, including meetings, training, and time-off requests, within the team calendar of Workforce Optimization for ITSM. It explains the use of Create, Read, Update, and Delete (CRUD) rights through inclusion and exclusion user criteria access.

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    Key Features

    • Access Control: Set CRUD rights for users, groups, or roles to manage their access to event types.
    • Role-Based Access: By default, users have role-based access. Team members don’t have read access to events tagged as 'Actual work.'
    • User Criteria Flexibility: Customize access for specific team members or entire groups based on user role.
    • Evaluation Logic: Access criteria are evaluated in a specific order, prioritizing exclusion criteria over inclusion criteria.

    Key Outcomes

    By implementing user criteria for event types, customers can:

    • Control which users can view and manage specific event types, enhancing security and relevance.
    • Ensure that team members have the appropriate permissions to create, read, update, or delete events as needed.
    • Quickly verify and adjust access rights to maintain effective team scheduling and event management.

    Manage user access for any event type such as meeting, training, and time-off requests in the team calendar.

    You can include or exclude Create, Read, Write or Update, and Delete (CRUD) rights for event types using the inclusion and exclusion user criteria access. You can perform the CRUD operations for users, groups, or roles.
    Note:
    By default:
    • Users have role-based access to manage event types.
    • Team members don’t have read-access to events of type Actual work.
    For additional flexibility around managing the CRUD access, you can set the user criteria for each event type. For example, if team members don't have access to edit their work shifts using their role-based access, you can set that access using user criteria. You can set this access for specific team members or for the whole group.

    The flow diagram shows the logic on how inclusion and exclusion user criteria access work for event types.Infographic that describes the user criteria access for event types flow. The text that describes the flow follows this infographic.

    How inclusion and exclusion user criteria access works
    When the user criteria rules get evaluated, it's done in the following order:
    1. The system first evaluates the exclusion access for each criteria.
      • If the exclusion access for a CRUD operation is set to true, then the system evaluates the user criteria.
        1. If the user doesn’t have access based on their role, then the user is denied access for the specific CRUD operation.
        2. If the user isn’t denied access, then the system evaluates the inclusion criteria.
      • If the exclusion access for a CRUD operation is set to false, then the system evaluates the inclusion criteria.
    2. For the inclusion access, for a specific CRUD operation such as Create, the system checks if at least one of the inclusion user criteria is set to true. If yes, then the system evaluates the user criteria based on the user's role access.
      • If the user:
        • Has access for the CRUD operation based on their user role, then the user can perform that action. For example, if the event type is training and the CRUD operation is Create then the user can create the training event types.
        • Doesn’t have access for the CRUD operation based on their user role, then the user can’t perform that action.
      • If at least one of the inclusion criteria isn’t set to true, the user doesn’t have access to the specific CRUD operation. In this example, the user can’t create the training event types.
    Note:
    The exclusion access always takes precedence over the inclusion access. If no inclusion or exclusion access is set, then the role-based access is used for managing event types.